dolorosa_12: (space)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
It's a public holiday, and the better part of a four-day weekend stretches blissfully ahead of me. I'm not in Cambridge at work, and therefore I'm able to pick up these Friday open threads again. Today's prompt is inspired by all the post-apocalyptic science fiction I've been reading recently (about which more in a later post). And the question is:

What is your favourite example of technology of the future that you've encountered in a science fiction novel/film/TV series/etc, and which seemed ridiculously dated by the time you'd encountered it.

Mine is an example which warms my librarian heart, from Victor Kelleher's The Beast of Heaven. This is a novel set in the distant future after a nuclear apocalypse has wiped out almost all life on Earth. The remaining people keep (an imperfect) knowledge of past human civilisation alive due to the fact that one person takes on a semi-sacerdotal role (part priest, part keeper of history and lore, part bardic reciter of this history and lore) due to being trained in the ability to read. And where are these surviving historical records to be found? In the advanced, ubiquitous, certain-to-survive-nuclear-apocalypse format of ... microfilm!

I find this delightful. It was already charmingly retro when I first read the book for my secondary school English class in 1999, and it's even more so with every year.

What about you?

Date: 2025-04-18 01:18 pm (UTC)
lirazel: Spock, Bones, and Kirk from TOS ([tv] boldly go)
From: [personal profile] lirazel
I love this but also I find it pretty realistic in the sense that if you could figure out a way to make sure it lasted for a very long time, microfilm is a good choice! You only need light and magnification to access it, which would be pretty easy to recreate, as opposed to, like, trying to re-invent a DVD player from scratch! So good thought, Mr. Kelleher!

I will have to ponder the question and see if something comes to mind!

(Also: yay four-day weekend!!!)

Date: 2025-04-18 02:36 pm (UTC)
lirazel: Evelyn from The Mummy stretches to reach a book on a far bookshelf while balancing on a ladder ([film] proud of what i am)
From: [personal profile] lirazel
But from the perspective of being a commonly and currently used format, something with which most people are familiar, and know how to access, it doesn't work at all. The book was published in the 1980s, and, as I say, even by the time I came to it in the 1990s, microfilm was a pretty niche format.

Oh yes, definitely! I just like the unexpectedness of something we think of as being obsolete actually being more likely to be useful in the future!

Date: 2025-04-18 05:17 pm (UTC)
corvidology: Ophelia and goldfish (Default)
From: [personal profile] corvidology
It basically turns into unusable vinegar smelling semi-goo after a number of years though no matter how well you store it.


Date: 2025-04-18 06:27 pm (UTC)
lirazel: Evelyn from The Mummy reads as she walks ([film] no harm ever came from reading)
From: [personal profile] lirazel
Oh yes, I'm familiar! But if you could figure out a way to do it that preserved it, it would be accessible in a way that digital stuff just isn't!

Date: 2025-04-18 02:10 pm (UTC)
pauraque: bird flying (Default)
From: [personal profile] pauraque
In Alexei Panshin's 1968 novel Rite of Passage, a future spacefaring society has all its literature stored in a digital library (so far so good), but when somebody wants to read a book, the librarian prints it out on paper for them.

Date: 2025-04-18 03:29 pm (UTC)
hamsterwoman: (B5 -- sentient crossing)
From: [personal profile] hamsterwoman
Ha, my example is similar to [personal profile] pauraque's, but from a more recent thing. In Babylon 5 (1990s TV show), there's a scene where a character on a space station walks up to this kiosk-type contraption, looks through the day's headlines, pushes some buttons, and selects a personalized newspaper for themselves -- which the kiosk contraption then prints off on a plastic-y sheet like a transparency (not transparent, though, but it seems to be a similar material, IIRC). When I watched it for the first time as it aired, that seemed suitably futuristic, compared to the very fixed paper newspapers. When I rewatched it with my kids c.2015, it was really funny to see how the show predicted one part of modern media -- the choice in what articles to read -- but completely missed the medium, or what infrastructure would or would not be needed to deliver that.

Date: 2025-04-19 02:23 pm (UTC)
pauraque: bird flying (Default)
From: [personal profile] pauraque
I love this! It's like they realized paper would be out of date, but they couldn't quite get their heads around not having physical media at all.

Date: 2025-04-18 06:40 pm (UTC)
forestofglory: A-Yuan from The Untamed holding a toy sword (A-Yuan)
From: [personal profile] forestofglory
Not what you are asking me about but this reminded me that the other day I downloaded a PDF of a document printed in the Ming Dynasty! I now have thousand of page of a Ming edition of the Taiping Guangji just sitting on my computer! So amazing!

Date: 2025-04-20 05:16 pm (UTC)
forestofglory: photo of an elaborately carved inkstone (inkstone2)
From: [personal profile] forestofglory
Yeah, it's not the best quality scan and it's got an annoying watermark, but it's still perfectly readable witch is amazing to me!
Edited (accidentally posted before I finished) Date: 2025-04-20 05:18 pm (UTC)

Date: 2025-04-19 04:26 pm (UTC)
trepkos: (Default)
From: [personal profile] trepkos
Well, Star Trek's communicators are starting to look a bit dated ... and why on earth do they have to describe what is happening to them on the planet? No body cams?

Date: 2025-04-20 07:19 am (UTC)
hunningham: Beautiful colourful pears (Default)
From: [personal profile] hunningham

Starman Jones by Heinlein. It's one of the juveniles, and people navigate between the stars using astrogation manuals, which are these insane multivolume books with charts & tables of numbers. The novel emphasises that they are printed on very thin paper. The navigator uses these manuals and a slide-rule to pilot the starship.

In the book the ship is lost, the captain dies, someone goes mad and destroys the navigation manuals and our hero saves the day because he has an eidetic memory & has memorised the entire manual. He's also plucky.

I read this in the mid-70s and it was already very dated then. Now?

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